Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 06, 1912, EXTRA 1, Page 7, Image 7

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EAST WILL MEET WEST IN GOLE FIML ROUND CHICAGO. Sept. 6.—The East will be matched against the West in the finals for the national amateur champion ships tomorrow. The drawing for tha .■•■■ mi-final rounds today made this cer in Jerome Travers and Mamilton K rr. Eastern players, contested today ilien the fourth day of the match or.nds started. They are the only su: - x ivors of the Eastern entrants who started in the tourney Monday. •■('hick” Evans and Warren K. Wood, ooth of Chicago, will fight it out today f.-i the honot of meeting the survivor of the Eastern duos struggle. In spite of the intense heat today, ; ..rest in the match brought a big y to the links. The tin t's will be I . d tomtit t ow. THE BASEBALL CARD SOUTHERN LEAGUE. Games Today. .Xaslivillc in Atlanta at Ponce DeLeon. Grille called at 3:30 o'clock. Montgomery in Birmingham. Memphis *’n Chattanooga. Standing of the Clubs. . i.. PC W. L. P.C. R i a.il. XI 49 .623 N'ville. .61 67 .477 Mobile .75 55 .577 (’’nooga. 58 68 .460 \ Ur. 68 CO .531 Mont. . .60 71 .459 MTnphis 61 67 189 I Atlanta .49 79 .383 Yesterday's Results. Xaslivil). X. Atlanta 6. Birmingham 7. Montgomery 1. Chattanooga 7. Memphis 5. New Orleans-Mobile, »»fT day AMERICAN LEAGUE Games Today. C!<■ > Hand in Chicago. \\ -■ -.ingbin in I'ostmi. P’-.iauelphia in New York Standing of the Clubs. \V. L. P.C w. 1.. P.C. 8.-sh»n '.’l 37 .711 Dmroit . 5.* 71 .154 P'rlii. 77 52 .597 C’land. . 55 73 .430 \Y.sh. . 78 53 .595 S. Louis U .83 ::46 C a ago. 64 63 .504 N. York 46 82 . '.59 Yesterday’s Results. !’,< t<m 1. ’AWnginn :: 1 ’»i i< ag > I. < ’leveinnd 1 I.idelp'iia T. . New Yf 6 (first game) Philadelphia 5. New York 2 (second ga me. > I•< t roit -St. Louis, rain. NATIONAL LEAGUE. Games Today. Boston in Brook!'u Nev York in Philadelphia. Chicago in Ci no ini rat i. Pittsburg in St. Louis. Standing of the Slubs. W. I P.C >. York 87 38 696 <”naii. 6?. 66 t'9 Ch’cago SO 46 63.' S. I.miis 5.7 7 J .133 P’hurg 74 53 583 Br’k’ 178 I’hila. *62 64 .192 ; Bost< i 38 89 299 Yesterday’s Rewts. Yew York 8. Philadelphia i (first ca \--v Y« . k I. Ph’ia'l Iphia 2 «seu nd u.jro > P :<»•»!<, n i B«>n •' i.- inrat, I. < ’hicago ’ Pittsbing . St. Loui- I. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. G.s tries Today. Toledo •»i «’olumhus. I ■ ais' ;P ■ in fndtanapoii- Mdvai'kee iu Si. I’.'ul. Kansas <’it> in Minneapolis. Standing of the C’ubs. W.T P.C I W. L. PC ML-. e< 71 77 .480 C hus • 58 613 S. i I 66 86 .101 Tni.-.;.. . 8” M I. Ville. . 5. 90 .388 K. <’ity 73 74 .497 t Tap. Ti.-. .53 ?.• .349 Yesterday’s Results. Kansas Co\ 7. Minneapol’s i oui.- vilh- 5. India tap.dis 3. Milwaukee 2. St. Paul : Toledo (Y 1 .t.iims 3. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Games Today. '' . onto in I b;’Tai- . 'lonina’ l*o‘- ' ster “nly gu ..cs schedule!. Standing of the Clubs. \V I. !’.'' I w I . P.C w.-onio .82 56 .s*l M’trea!. 63 73 463 • "■ 8 •;■■■• 62 10 170 R’ tn ore . 69 66 ..’Pl;.' C r .6? 76 .449 P. 'in re. .68 66 ‘O’. I P» ■ 57 78 .422 Yeste day’s Bpji'*s. Baltimore 3. P: uivTpncr |. Buffalo ToK.Dto 6 Rochester 5. M r. ■ < 1 < n hers noi sc ed. ied APPALACHIAN LEAGUE. Gimes Today. -le iiie in Morristown P.’.M'it it Johnson City. '• • ' v ille ■ n (’it veland. Standing of the Clubs. ,\-. !.. p C | W. L. P C 16 , I’! '..r<l. ‘5 I l ' 171* 51 n: .540 e\ iID ’5 56 . 146 50 45 .526 I M’t'wn. 38 54 .113 Yesterday's Results. .-■nson C'iy 7. Brisloi I (lit -i game, inCitv .. Brist »l 0 (s<i<>t:d game n« x ville 3. ('leveland 0. ALEXANDER PUTS TECH THROUGH LIGHT DRILL pructii <■ was held In the T '" m'Uball squad yesienl r.’ out on ' ‘-'.its ('oach Heilman is under the th. ’. in., will tie back for work to- I'oaeh Alexander was in charge ■‘l 1 '■ w<> k ai d put th l ' squad through usual conditioning work. lid .‘Jeans, who it was thought would vol return, w ill be back in school and 1. report this week. This certain!.' • neouraging news, and Ills preseni • il greailx strengthen the line. Spem ' big. heat ,v. strong-looking man fi o:. ‘ 'irroilton, has reported, and ha- a ; i I’lianee of landing a berth on the ' ! t team b. last year's center, reported sot k ' id i.'. and. though light scorns to m ereat “h.jpe Nothing startling has happened in ■ way of new material being' found, "i. slowly and surely, the nucleus is ' irg surrounded by healthy, spirited and Tech may not handle the '• -eiueni squad fter all. I l ' tike getting money from home, for .'lone.v easily made by reading, using t"i answering the Want Ads in The • • •rgian. Few people realize the many 'n irtunitms offered them among the •Il ads. tt’fe a good sign that if the peo ' ' dip no t g et results from the Want Ads ■ f ' 'te Georgian that there would not be ■can.' of them. If. tor nothing else, sit ■ at I check off the ads that appeal to II Von will be astonished bow many of ' -in mean money to you. Th** Want Ad Pages are bargain counters In every line ? Iwf ! ? MANENT CVJtE . < ' J the most obstinate cases guaranteed in fr«»?r c G days ; no o*her treatment required. \ Sold by all druggists. C Self-Taught Golfers Seldom Learn Real Enjoyment of Game By Mark Allerton. I’ DO not think that very many people become golfers because of a fixed determination or malice aforethought. A few. in deed, do because their doctor tells them to, or because golf is the fashion, or because (and these are the rarest) they realize that, of all games, golf presents the greatest numbet of opportunities for enjoy ment. 1 he rest take to golf as some peo ple take to drink. They are in duced to play a stroke or two. and these strokes lead to a round, and that round to t any rounds: and before the victim knows where he is, all that matters to him in heaven above or earth beneath is the hit ting of a ball well and truly, and the lowering of his handicap. It is rather a pity, from one point ot view, that the golf habit, like the drug habit, seizes upon its victim in this insidious manner. Let me explain why. Il is at t'nis season of the 'ear that the golf microbe gets busy. Ab sorts and conditions of peopie who have hitherto known golf only as it is interpreted to the comic piiss go to a holidax resori where there is ,i golf course. Tit . they meet some indulgent friend w ho in ti tes them t i .. ;mme. p,. ; - , n g. ha’f-eontemptuoc ly. th, , accept the invitation, and in nine eases out of ten th-.y are inocah. ,ed. The g<;lf microbe nas them in its power. Life of Futile Hopes. They continue to play strenuous and int ftieient golf with whomso ever they can beguile. If they be eons, ientious p -ople th. x will plat solitary roum.s b\ themsclvi’s. or even p'.qti.e the shots that are most difficult to them. iml one that —aft< they have gone back to town atid joined a club—they will get a handi< ap and take part in mate'. .. and <1 regret to say it > the :est i f their life will be om ion.’. Hgiet and a series of futil hopes. The :. as<ai of this horrible fate is because th. st . eople haVe ben content .<> teach themselves. Tin y have hugged to themselves the de lusion that golf is quite an easy game, that anybody ought, to be able to hit a ball with a stick with a bit of wood or iron at the end of it. Wl '-’n lie-, fail to hit the ball to theit own su! isl'act'on they b;'.m th s. h; ' ind the other cir c . «-:a" > Tin . refuse to believe that re - '. ' ight ind a wrong w \ i t .i.i'. '.g he oall. and that the rigiit ...ty van rarely be at tained by intuition. Golf i- tn vxtrao dinaril.' fickle game and one day it will delude thes, people into thinking that they reall; have mastered it, while th< r a ..ill convince them that the diiiicu’ty which a camel must expe ■ hn :n emleavoring to enter the eye of a m i dle is nothing eom pai'i'd to the difficulty of hitting a golf ball toward a green. riost oi tills difficulty is due to ignoraree. The majority of begin ners have been told, or they have rt.-.h n books, that in playing a strok ■ one must not move one's hotly, or drop one's right shoulder, move one's head, oi snatch in one's arms, or tin tiny .if the other half-dozen things on- is so curi ously apt to do. Ami these dear souls .do their best to put into pr.n t: e the knowledge that is theirs, ami tliex fail simply becansr they lack the— . . power the-gil'ti’ gie ns To see oursels as itiiers see ns. By watching' a foozivr pin;, one stro' ■ a competent teacher.will lie able to di 'ariose his ailment. II ><•' <•»!•» ■ » V li t n- «!.. ~JfeRNSHEiM pGAf^ ; Good | .y'/ R>rlo Correct Proverb Solutions Picture No. 61 Picture No. 62 N3vex~"\ / i BvfUewsoME coirw (» 0 fporrr'rou '> /®fN. carrsicu Vpown /*\ I ktvovu /CKr ''° I oP. /<5 .wwßejt o ) V x V\ / ' v - >*"- « v - Z! rw ■@K^ 7 , W S#' 2® h is easier io descend than ascend. A rascal grown rich has lost ah his kindred. THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NT AYS. FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 6. I!H2 will prescribe his treatment, and the worst of the remedy is that the sufferer will, mote likely than not. find it almost worse than the dis ease. His bad habits will have be come second nature to him. To pull in his arms, for example, will seem to him the most comfortable way in which to play the stroke, and to thrust them out will be an Irksome and awkward exorcise. He will, accordingly, have to unlearn all that he knows of golf before he begins to learn the correct method of playing the game. That is why the casual and de sultory way in which people "take to golf" is to be deplored. They would save themselves a great deal of unhappiness if. right at the be ginning'. they received proper tui tion from a competent teacher. I distrust amateur teachers. As the tag goes, the advice that one gets for nothing is seldom worth more. The professional teacher is more conscientious, more tolerant and less irritable than the friendly am ateur. We are also more inclined to nay strict attention to his pre cepts. Because we want to get the value for our money we are care ful to do as he tells us. Crux ot the Matter. In short. J advise all those hosts i f piiiph who. within the next few week.-. > i.l be Introduced to golf for t.-.e first time, to take the game se riously. and to learn it from the di'ect instruction of one who knows how to teach it. Those who do not wish to take all i hi: trouble may cast my own words in my teeth, repeating that golf is a game, ami that we should pi.ty golf for the sheer fun of it. 1 urge in return that a game is all the better game and all the Jollier if on can play it so that one's rec reation is not a series of trials anti blasted hopes. To the confirmed foozier there is really very little fnn to b" got out of a round of the links, on the contrary, it is an o'd al that brings into prominence ine frailties of his character. On the other hand, the player who is continually In doubt whether he will even hit the ball, not to mtn ion hitting it in the right direction. I ':.s su much worry on bis mind that he lias trn thought to spare on I the beating of his opponent. I Summer I I Excufi Rates A -g_. ■ | I CINCINNATI, $19.50 | LOUISVILLE, SIB.OO I CHICAGO, - $30.00 j KNOXVILLE - $7.90 g Tickets on Sale Daily, Good y to October 31st, Returning I Citv Ticket Office,4 Peachtree j The Big Race Here is the up-to-the-minute dope on • how the “Big Five’’ batters of the American league are hitting: ~ plXyer— A. B. 'HA ; COBB I 478 197 i 412 SPEAKER 500 199 398 I JACKSON 478 175 366 ! COLLINS 448 151 337 I LAJOIE 346 111 321_ Ty Cobb did not play yesterday, as the Detroit Tigers were idle. Tris- Speaker ! had a peacherino of a day. He was up i four times and banged out three safe and sound swats, and gained three full points thereby. Jackson lost two points by fall ing to connect in three attempts. Collins leaped forward four notches by securing two hits in four visits to the dish. La jole did not get a blooming safe clout in four attempts. YESTERDAY’S DISASTER. The score: XASHVILLE ab. r. h. pi>. a. e. Haley,' If 4 2 4 I u 0 Lattimore. 2b. ... 11 1 3 2 0 Welchonce, cf. . . . 5 1 2 2 <i 0 Perry, 3b. 4 u 1 I j (i Young, rs 4 2 2 0 0 0 Schwartz, Ib. ... 4 1 2 tn I n Lindsay, ss3 1 o 1 2 0 Elliott, c 4 0 3 6 1 o Case, p 3 n 0 0 1 0 Bair, p1 o 0 0 I 0 Totals 33 8 15 24 10 0 ATLANTA— ah. r h po a r Agler. Il>s 1 :t 6 1 0 Bailey, If 4 n 1 0 n 0 Harbison, s.- 4 2 2 2 tlperman, 2b5 1 i ■_ 2 <1 McElveen. 3b. ... 4 0 1 3 I 0 Callahan, cf 3 11 5 0 0 Reynolds, c 3 0 0 6 2 3 Wolfe, rs 3 1 0 0 0 0 Sitton, p. 3 0 0 0 1 0 Totals 32 6 12 21 8 4 Score by innings: R. Nashvilleooo 132 200 8 Atlanta .011 004 000—6 Summary: Two-base hits Agler. Har bison. Perry. Alperman. Three-base hits —Callahan, Dale.' . Young Innings pitched By Case 5 2-3. with 9 hits and 4 runs. Struck out- By Case 4, by Bair 2. b\ Sit ton 6. Bases on balls—Off Sitton 2, off Bair 1. off Case 3. Sacrifice hits Sitton. Lattimore 2. Perry Stolen bases Wel chonce 2, Callahan. Daley. Passed bail Reynolds. Wild pitch—Sitton 2. Hit by pitched ball—By Case, Callahan: by Bair, Reynolds. Time, 2:10 empires Hart ami Pfenninger. OPTICAL WORK OF THE HIGHEST CLASS Is what Dr. Hines, the Opto metrist, gives in every case. He "xamines the eyes and fits glasses in such away that the;, relieve the trouble, remove all strain ft ■ tn the nerves and muscles, give perfect sight and make life worth living. He does ail this without para lyzing the eyes with poisonous drops ami drugs. Have your eyes examined by scientific meth ods anil get pleasure, comfort and relief out of your glasses at once. Examination Free. The Dixie" finger top eye glasses, the invention of Dr. Hines, will stay on any nose; can not slip or fall off. HINES OPTICAL COMPANY 91 Peachtree St. Between Montgomery and Alcazar Theaters BASEB A L L ; THURSDAY ATLANTA vs. MEMPHIS Ponce DeLeon Park Game called 3:30. 10 martin htav V 19% PEACHTREE STREET UPSTAIRS STRICTLY COKFIOtSTIAL UNREDEEMED PLEDGES y fOR SAtE >4/ PLAVERS' UNION IS mUNM IN NEW W NEW YORK, Sept. 6 Major league bast ball placets formally launched their new protective organization yesterday. It is known as the National and Amer ican League Baseball Fraternity, and its certificate of incorporation was igned by Supreme Court Justice De laney. According to the petition for incor poration. its object is to foster fra ternal feeling among the players in the two big leagues. Dave Fultz, former b. -■■ball and football star, who was largely instrumental in bringing the n. w movement to a head, is at present president ot the association. While the articles of incorporation have not been made public, it is gen erally belli ved the players intend, for mutual protection, to demand repre sentation of their brotherhood in the councils of organized baseball. The call for the organization re sulted from the difficulties of Ty Cobb which precipitated a strike among the Detroit team in Philadelphia early in the season. Opposition from club owners is expected to be directed against the organization. The magnates fear this means the unionization of baseball and the possi bility of strikes. Seventeen men. including players from the Giants. Pirates. Phillies White Sox, Cardinals, Naps and Trolley Dodgers, signed the articles of incorporation. SEABOARD WILL RUN BIRMINGHAM EXCURSION Tuesday, September 17th. $2.5U round trip. Heave old depot 8 a. m. Men and Women I CURE YOU TO STAY CURED, of all chronic, nervous, private. blood and skin diseases. I use the very latest meth ods, therefore getting desired results. I give 606, the celebrated German preparation, for blood poison, with out cutting or deten tion from business. I cure you or .make no charge. Everything A confidential C )nie to me without de lay, and let me demonstrate how 1 give you results where other physicians have failed. I cure Vari cocele, Stricture. Piles, Nervous De bility, Kidney, Bladder and prostatic troubles. Acute discharges ami In flammation and all contracted dis eases. FREE consultation and exam ination. Hours, 8 a. ni. to 7 p. m. Sundays, 9 to 1. Dr J. D. HUGHES, Specialist Opposite Third National Bank 16i North Broad St., Atlanta. Ga. You’ll Like This Blue and Gold Set >' »• <■ f- *,» M b } •> >1 z> fflD \* •' ' BY ‘ri J ,“’f -• ' /.• S- 1 HL -<ww« : w&?'- 'jSk fir ;? I. &, i *"• .> U 3 • /i hk : v---1x 1 .«*• ■■ iferaw&. ■K ‘ ' '“' A»'’ i 1 ■-O ■PNRW* . (llrw. Wr A<» S / A- - <■ •♦ K V i) 4 I™*- ' ' Jg ->. y L £ ' • ' -<■ ■7 BMK w« MU B ■ *ML IM 0r0?..-..„ •. f jßnk Hundreds of others, in all walks of life, have praised this set. Its beau ty is of an uncommon sort. Ami we'll vouch for its utility The decoration stays. It’s tired into the ware by a new process, and it’s underglazed. It can’t come off. This is your last chance to obtain this set for $3.50 and the six Pre mium Coupons cut from The Georgian. (See page 2.) When our present stock is exhausted the offer will be withdrawn. The A Premium Room 20 E. Alabama St. ANNOUNCING THE FIRST SHOWING OF STETSON HATS FOR THE FALL SEASON NINETEEN HUNDRED TWELVE Soft and Derby Hats ’ All New Shades and Shapes $3.50 to $5.00 Our Fall Tailoring is ready for your inspection Suits made to your measure in Our Own Shop. i « Place your order now. $20.00 to $45.00 ESSIG BROS. CO. (i Correct Dress for Men" 26 Whitehall USE GEORGIAN WANT ADS 7